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(No Model.)

A. F. JACKSON;

ORANGE SPOON.

No. 457,723. Patented Augr ll, 1891.

INVENTOR ATTOHNE YS A- WITNESSES:

I W W 5400' V ,-d N,

UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.

AUSTIN F. JACKSON, OF TAUNTON, MASSACHUSETTS, ASSIGNOR TO THE REED' dzBARTON CORPORATION, OF SAME PLACE.

ORANGE-SPOON.

SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 457,723 dated August11, 1891.

Application 'filed March 11, 1891. Serial No. 384,636. No modal.)

To all whom it may concern- Be it known that I, AUSTIN F. J ACKSON, ofTaunton, in the county of Bristol and State of Massachusetts, haveinvented a new and useful Improvement in Orange-Spoons, of which thefollowing is a specification.

In eating oranges at the table a popular and delicate method is todivide the fruit transversely to its axis and then scoop out with aspoon the juice and pulp from the several cells or compartments. Withthe ordinary construction of spoon this method is liable to spurt thejuice out into the face or upon the clothes.

My invention is designed to provide a form of spoon for obviating thisobjectionable contingency and rendering this method'cleanly andsatisfactory; and to that end itconsists in a spoon having a bowl with alip or projection at its end which is sharpened to a chisel-edge, and inconnection therewith one or more grooves, creases, or channels, whichallow the juice to run down into the bowl of the spoon from the rupturedorange-cells, instead of overflowing and dripping, as hereinafter fullydescribed.

Figure 1 is a face or top side view of the spoon. Fig. 2 is alongitudinal section through the center of the bowl, and Fig. 3 is atransverse section through the same.

A is the bowl of the spoon, which is formed at the end with a prolateprojecting lip a,

whose curved outline is brought to a sharp cutting-edge, as shown inFig. 2. From this end of the spoon and running down into the bowl is oneor more grooves, channels, or creases b, which act as ducts or conduitsfor the orange-juice to lead it down into the bowl from the rupturedcells, instead of allowing it to flood and overflow the bowl and drip intransit to the month. With this form of spoon the sharp. projecting lipreadily cuts the pulp from the cells of the orange, the juices areprevented from dripping, and the operation is efiected with delicacy,dispatch, and satisfaction To facilitate the action of the spoon inscooping out the juice and pulp, the bowl is made somewhat hook-shapedi.e.,the plane of the rim of the bowl, instead of being flat, as usual,and as is indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 2, is curved, giving the tipor lip of the bowl a greaterelevation.

Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new is A spoonhaving at the end of its bowl a lip or projection a, with a sharpenededge, and one or more grooves or channels leading therefrom down intothe bowl, substantially as shown and described.

AUSTIN F. JACKSON.

Witnesses: V

THEO. P. HALL, JAMES P. HERsEY.

